The City of
Mesa is considering collaborating with CoreCivic, previously known as Corrections
Corporation of America, to begin sending persons convicted of a misdemeanor to private prison facilities in Eloy and Florence.

This would mark the first time an Arizona municipality has used private prisons in place of county jail facilities for misdemeanor offenders. Students at Polytechnic campus and residing in
Mesa are directly endangered by worse incarceration conditions.

Steve
Kilar of the American Civil Liberties Union said that the private prisons, rather than embracing rehabilitation, have profit motives in creating an endless cycle of incarceration, release and re-arrest.

“They are
perfectly happy to have people reentering the prison system, because the more
bodies they have, the more money they are making, and that is completely
counter to what a prison system should be,” Kilar said.

This
particularly impacts those living within Mesa. Rather than improving police-community relations, this directly
drives a wedge between the two, as police patrols now have the duty to protect and
serve city investments rather than city residents.

Private
prisons contractually charge some localities that do not fill their quotas, meaning that if Mesa
experiences a reduction in crime, it may be a drawback for the city budget. CoreCivic and other private prison corporations keep profits up through the use of inoccupancy fines.

According to In the Public Interest, three Arizona contracts require 100 percent occupancy, without which there are inoccupancy fines.

A contractual occupancy quota — something which would be negotiated between now and a final decision — could
mean increased patrols around Mesa, looking to improve arrest quotas to avoid
sizable fines.

Already,
the county is dealing with a declining inmate population, which is part of
the problem surrounding the costs of incarceration for the county. In a written
statement on March 22, 2017, Maricopa County Sheriff Paul Penzone said that this
was the principle reason for the increase in costs.

“Hard costs of staffing and
facilities is unchanged,” the statement said.

If there is
a lack of crime around Maricopa County, it seems odd that a Maricopa County municipality
would be the first to look toward having a capacity minimum in prisons. But
the crime drop reported into 2014 appears to be holding across the county.

Arrest rates
for violent crime in 2014 remained at 31,936, dropping to 29,859 in 2015, the
last year for which Arizona Department of Public Safety data is available. Total arrests have fallen by 15 percent from 2013 to 2015.

If Mesa fails to take this into account, they could wind up with an occupancy requirement clause in the contract that would cost the city more money for having less crime. This extends beyond the social costs of a system that ties financial incentives to keeping higher numbers of residents incarcerated.

That means
more unnecessary enforcement for highly watched neighborhoods like those around
the university, but will also strain relations further between the City of Mesa
and communities of color.

Maricopa
County is reworking its incarceration system, particularly with the staff changes
being reflected in this week’s announced closing of the infamous Tent City. While it
remains to be seen how this closure will affect the cost of the system overall,
it would be wise for the City of Mesa to wait and see, rather than getting into
a high-risk contract with CoreCivic.

If the
ethical quandaries of private prisons aren’t enough, then the price tag of a
safer Mesa should be enough to end Mesa’s foray into a CoreCivic contract.

Correction: The name of the source Steve Kilar was incorrectly named as Kilner. The article has been updated to reflect the changes.